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Test your basic knowledge |
Skeletal System
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
health-sciences
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The most caudal of the three pairs of bones that make up the pelvis.
Temporomandibular Joint
Ischium
Pterygoid Bones
Compact Bone
2. Skull bones; external bones of the cranium. These bones make up the 'forehead' region of the skull and contain the large frontal sinuses. The cornual process in horned animals is an extenion of this bone.
Short Bones
Frontal Bones
Cranium
Navicular Bone
3. The epiphyseal plate of a long bone; located at the junction of the proximal and distal epiphyses with the diaphysis. Areas where long bones increase in length by the process of endochondral bone formation. When an animal reaches its full size - thes
Lacrimal Bones
Fibrous Joint
Tarsus
Growth Plate
4. The second cervical vertebra; it forms the atlantoaxial joint with the first cervical vertebra - the atlas.
Fibrous Joint
Fabellae
Axis
Red Bone Marrow
5. The process of a vertebra that forms a synovial joint with an adjacent vertebra.
Articular Process
Vertebral Column
Mandible
Meniscus
6. An immovable fibrous joint - such as the suture that unites most of the skull bones.
Ramus
Olecranon Process
Thoracic Vertebrae
Synarthrosis
7. The joint between the femur and the tibia; called the knee joint in humans.
Ribs
Metacarpal Bones
Stifle Joint
Nutrient Foramen
8. The large hole in the occipital bone through which the spinal cord exits the skull.
Foramen Magnum
Haversian Canal
Ungual Process
Periosteum
9. The soft material that fills the spaces inside the bones; two types of bone marrow are red bone marrow - which forms blood cells - and yellow bone marrow - which consists primarily of adipose tissue.
Process
Bone Marrow
Sutures
Pterygoid Bones
10. Skull bones that are part of the external bones of the cranium; located on the dorsal midline just rostral to the occipital bone.
Calcaneal Tuberosity
Flat Bone
Sacrum
Interparietal Bones
11. A skull bone that is one of the external bones of the cranium; the caudal - most bone of the skull that forms the atlanto - occipital joint with the first cervical vertebra through the occipital condyles. The large foramen magnum in the occipital bon
Occipital Bone
Fibrous Joint
Tibia
Foramen Magnum
12. A joint that allows only a rotary motion; the only true joint of this type is the atlantoaxial joint ('no joint').
Bones of the face
Os Penis
Pivot Joint
Osteoclasts
13. The hormone secreted by the parathyroid gland that prevents the level of calcium in the blood from getting too low.
Proximal Sesamoid Bones
Zygomatic Bones
Mandible
Parathyroid Hormone
14. An alternate name for joint cavity.
Foramen
Patella
Hard Palate
Joint Space
15. The area of a bone that joins the head with the main portion of the bone.
Red Bone Marrow
Synovial Fluid
Neck
Cervical Vertebrae
16. The 'horn core' of horned animals; a process of the frontal bone. The hollow cavity within this process is continuous with the frontal sinus (the paranasal sinus of the frontal bone).
Long Bone
Cornual Process
Compact Bone
Ulna
17. The fibrous membrane that lines the hollow interiors of bones.
Endosteum
Vomer Bone
Secondary Growth Center
Stapes
18. Process on the cranial end of the second cervical vertebra (axis) that fits into the caudal end of the first cervical vertebra (atlas).
Dens
Bone Marrow
Cornual Process
Obturator Foramina
19. A toe that does not reach the ground - such as the first digit of dogs and cats and the rudimentary medial and lateral toes of cattle.
Ilium
Arthrodial Joint
Dewclaw
Osteoclasts
20. The smallest and most medial of the three pairs of bones that make up the pelvis; forms the cranial portion of the floor of the pelvis.
Primary Growth Center
Sternum
Pubis
Brachycephalic
21. Secondary areas of growth in bones developing by the endochondral method; areas of bone development located outside the main portions of the carilaginous bone templates in a developing fetus.
Condyle
Fabellae
Secondary Growth Center
Spinal Canal
22. The bones of the neck portion of the spinal column.
Cervical Vertebrae
Foramen Magnum
Joint Capsule
Primary Growth Center
23. The sievelike area of the ethmoid bone through which the many branches of the olfactory nerve pass from the upper portion of the nasal cavity to the olfactory bulbs of the brain.
Pubis
Cribriform Plate
Process
Joint Space
24. The single - dorsally projecting process of a vertebra.
Hematopoiesis
Spinous Process
Ball - and - Socket Joint
Interparietal Bones
25. A gliding joint in which two flat - articular surfaces rock on each other; this type of joint usually allows only the movements of flexion and extension.
Hyoid Bone
Axis
Arthrodial Joint
Lacrimal Bones
26. An immovable joint; also known as a synarthrosis. The bones are firmly united by fibrous tissue; includes the sutures between the skull bones.
Radius
Zygomatic Arches
Fibrous Joint
Volkmann's Canals
27. Skull bones that are part of the internal bones of the face; make up the caudal portion of the hard palate.
Maxillary Bones
Adduction
Secondary Growth Center
Palatine Bones
28. The paranasal sinus in the maxillary bones.
Neck
Carpal Bones
Paranasal Sinus
Maxillary Sinuses
29. A bone of the sternum.
Atlas
Circumduction
Mandibular Symphysis
Sternebra
30. The joint movement whereby an extremity is moved away from the median plane.
Abduction
Red Bone Marrow
Primary Growth Center
Scapula
31. One of two bones (the radius is the other) that form the antebrachium - or forearm; forms a major portion of the elbow joint with the distal end of the humerus.
Mandibular Symphysis
Calcitonin
Ulna
Primary Growth Center
32. Mature bone cells located in lacunae.
Diaphysis
Foramen Magnum
Endosteum
Osteocytes
33. A joint motion whereby the distal end of an extremity moves in a circle.
Circumduction
Ossification
Sternal Ribs
Process
34. One of the two bones (with the ulna) that form the antebrachium - or forearm; usually the main weightbearing bone.
Endochondral Bone Formation
Pterygoid Bones
Maxillary Sinuses
Radius
35. The immovable fibrous joints that unite most of the skull bones; also known as synarthroses.
Stapes
Sutures
Meniscus
Vertebral Column
36. Membrane bone formation; the type of bone formation that occurs only in certain skull bones when bone froms in the fibrous tissue membranes that cover the brain of the developing fetus.
Ribs
Intramembranous Bone Formation
Cranium
Pelvic Symphysis
37. The bones along the central axis of the body; made up of the skull - hyoid bone - the spinal column - the ribs - and the sternum.
Radius
Sternebra
Joint Capsule
Axial Skeleton
38. The shaft portion of a long bone.
Lumbar Vertebrae
Diaphysis
Patella
Process
39. Long bones of the axial skeleton that form the lateral walls of the thorax; dorsal portions are made of bone and form synovial joints with the thoracic vertebrae. Ventral portions are cartilage.
Ribs
Stifle Joint
Haversian System
Dolichocephalic
40. The process on the distal end of the distal phalanx of dogs and cats that is surrounded by the claw in the living animal.
Bone Marrow
Hinge Joint
Ungual Process
Olecranon Process
41. A joint movement that consists of a twisting motion of a part on its own axis.
Brachium
Bone Cortex
Rotation
Sphenoid Bone
42. The cartilaginous disk located between the bodies of adjacent vertebrae; acts as a shock absorber for the vertebrae.
Xiphoid
Red Bone Marrow
Intervertebral Disk
Asternal Ribs
43. Skull bones that are part of the internal bones of the face; also known as the nasal conchae. Four thin - scroll - like bones that fill most of the space in the nasal cavity.
Nutrient Foramen
Vertebra
Occipital Bone
Turbinates
44. The bones of the carpus; consist of two parallel rows of short bones located between the distal ends of the radius and ulna and the proximal ends of the metacarpal bones.
Olecranon Process
Ramus
Carpal Bones
Malleus
45. The large process on the proximal end of the ulna that forms the point of the elbow; the site where the triceps brachii tendon attaches.
Cartilaginous Joints
Olecranon Process
Neck
Volkmann's Canals
46. Another name for cancellous bone.
Thoracic Vertebrae
Spongy Bone
Ulna
Scapula
47. The fluid - filled potential space between the joint surfaces of a synovial joint; normally filled by synovial fluid.
Pelvis
Joint Cavity
Sesamoid Bones
Tympanic Membrane
48. The joint between the pelvis and the sacrum that joins the pelvic limb to the axial skeleton.
Sacroiliac Joint
Maxillary Bones
Pelvic Limb
Ischium
49. A skull bone; an internal bone of the cranium. This single bone is located just rostral to the sphenoid bone and contains the cribriform plate.
Ethmoid Bone
Cribriform Plate
Axial Skeleton
Growth Plate
50. The visceral bone in the heart of cattle that helps support the valves of the heart.
Navicular Bone
Os Cordis
Bones of the face
Temporomandibular Joint